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Horn Spoon2346
Lidded Bentwood Box7763
Horn Spoon1446
Mask25.0/205

Forehead masks of this type leave the dancer's face exposed. Sometimes during the dance the blanket is raised with the forearms to cover the face, allowing the mask to peer over the blanket and heightening the illusion of a bird or animal. This mask is carved of red cedar and is very light in weight. The painting is in the usual colors--black eyebrows, eye detail, and beak; red lips, nostrils, and cheek detail; green eyesockets; and white in various lines and negative areas. (Holm, Crooked Beak of Heaven, 1972)

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, paint and cloth
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Dzoonokwa Mask1-1450

Dzoonokwa, a Sasquatch-like creature, belongs to a family of humanoid giants who are both beneficial and menacing to humans. She is known to steal children, but can also bestow power and wealth. A chief who wears this mask when he speaks demonstrates that his ancestors gained this power. (Holm, Spirit and Ancestor, 1987)

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, hair, paint and graphite
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Dzoonokwa Mask1-1449

The paint is black and red.

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, paint and human hair
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Whistle1994-96/8
Horn Spoon1435
Spoon1-1867
Whistle25.0/265

This well-finished hamatsa whistle depends for its decoration upon a single color change from the natural wood mouthpiece to dark brown or black painting over the remaining surface, and sensitive shifts from sharp to rounded corners of its square cross section. The three pieces of hardwood, perhaps yew, are fastened together with four tight bindings of commercial seine twine (one of which is missing), which themselves become a part of the decoration. (Holm, Crooked Beak of Heaven, 1972)

Culture
Kwakwaka'wakw
Material
wood, string and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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